SANDHAM m@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-01-29 publishedDIELEMAN /
SANDHAM
Jacqueline and Travis along with their families are pleased to announce their forthcoming marriage.
The wedding will take place on February 12, 2005 on the island of Curacao

SCHEDEWITZ m@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-02-12 publishedSCHEDEWITZ,
Catherine and Robert - Happy Valentine's Day
Married August 7, 2004 in London, Ontario. Congratulations Catherine
DUDZIC and Robert
SCHEDEWITZ on celebrating your first Valentine's Day as Husband and Wife.
With love from your Family and Friends.

SCHOENHERR m@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-06-18 publishedFALLON /
SCHOENHERR
With much joy we announce the forthcoming marriage of Dr. Katherine
Mary FALLON, daughter of Anne
FALLON and the late William
FALLON
of Saint Thomas to John
SCHOENHERR,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward
SCHOENHERR
of Waterloo, Ontario The wedding will take place July 30, in London, Ontario
Love and Blessings from Mom and family.

SCOTT m@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-05-14 publishedSCOTT,
Carmen and Barbara - Happy 50th Wedding Anniversary
From your kids and their family. Friends are invited to join
the celebration at the Delaware Community Centre May 15th between
2 and 5 p.m.

SHALE m@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-03-08 publishedSHALE,
Terry and Linda - 30th Anniversary
A special Happy Anniversary Mom and Dad
To two of the most incredible parents who mean the world to each other and to us.
We love you both very much.
Your daughters, Teralynn and Vicki.

SHARP m@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-06-18 publishedSHARP,
Allin and Nettie
(COOPER) - Happy 50th Wedding Anniversary
June 25th, 1955
The children of Mr. and Mrs. Allin and Nettie
(COOPER)
SHARP wish
to invite you to an Open House on June 25, 2005 1-4pm at 500 First Street
The Nortel Community Centre 519-319-1162
Best Wishes Only

SHEPHERD m@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-03-26 publishedSHEPHERD,
Alan and Kathleen - Happy 60th Anniversary
March 31st, 2005
Lots of love from all your family and Friends.
We wish you all the best!

SINGER m@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2005-10-08 published
Mia KIM and Scott Thomas
SINGER -- Match:
By Judith Tenenbaum, Saturday, October 8, 2005, Page M4
Scott Thomas
SINGER was a member of an endangered fellowship,
that of the company man. Yet, unlike the snap, crackle and pop
of the signature brand he managed, his personal life had all
the verve of cornflakes. On graduating from York University in
2002, Mr. SINGER continued with Kellogg Canada Inc., where he
had worked part-time for three years, but his progress came at
a social cost. "I spent so much time at work that my father would
always say, 'Don't worry, one day you will meet someone there,'
Mr. SINGER recalls.
Soon, a harbinger of change appeared when Queen's University
graduate Mia
KIM, a new assistant brand manager, joined the breakfast
club. "[She was] similar in age to me. We became instantaneous
good Friends and started going for lunches," Mr.
SINGER says.
Ms. KIM was home alone on New Year's Eve, 2002, recuperating
from a car accident, when he called near midnight. A five-hour
exchange led to a first date seeing Gangs of New York. Later,
Ms. KIM would admit its length, not its content, held the appeal
as she wanted to maximize their time together.
"We had such a close bond so fast," Mr.
SINGER says, "I wanted
to take her away just two weeks after we had been dating and
Valentine's Day seemed perfect." The trip would be a surprise,
and he gave her a series of envelopes in sequence with clues
to the highlights: destination (New York), hotel (the Plaza),
a Broadway show (The Producers), and so on.
Ms. KIM's friend Susan
JACKMAN recalls the long e-mail she received
soon after the pair came home. "The way she was talking, it felt
like a commitment was formed early on," Ms.
JACKMAN says.
The inseparable twosome began playing golf and driving together
to and from work.
Family was paramount to him, and he valued that trait in others,
embracing the tandem of Ms.
KIM and her mother. "They came as
a package," friend Nina
KIM (no relation) says. "Her mother loves
him, cooks Korean food for him, and he... calls her 'mother-in-law'
in Korean." A passion for cottage life further linked the pair.
"Being able to spend weekends at my parents' cottage means so
much to me that I think this is one of the reasons we fit so
well," Mr.
SINGER says.
On the way to the cottage, they had often admired St. George's
AnglicanChurch on the edge of Lake Simcoe. Mr.
SINGER chose
it as the site of his Thanksgiving, 2004, proposal.
However, concerned the church's Fall Flower Festival would bring
a deluge of visitors and usurp the moment, Mr.
SINGER roused
Ms. KIM at 7 a.m. on the pretext of driving to town for a newspaper
and paused at the tiny church.
A sole parishioner left, giving the couple a rare solitude in
the autumnal air of the church. "We sat down in the front pew,
I put my arm around her and decided not to think of what I'd
say until the moment because I wanted it straight from the heart,"
Mr. SINGER says.
On September 22, after a rehearsal dinner, the couple donned
Korean wedding attire for a ceremony in which parents and grandparents
knelt and offered advice. Chestnuts representing girls and dates
for boys, predicting their future bounty, were tossed into a
shawl held by the pair.
Two days later, at the Rosedale Golf Club, guests with loot bags
topped by Rice Krispie squares boarded buses and settled in to
view Father of the Bride as they motored to St. George's Anglican
Church. The bridesmaids appeared like fall foliage in burnt orange,
yellow and fuchsia replications of a vintage Oscar de la Renta
design. The dewy bride, 27, dressed in a Vera Wang creation,
approached the altar, where Reverend Robin
HEADER wed the couple.
The newlyweds live near Lawrence and Mount Pleasant. Mr.
SINGER,
25, ponders new product innovation at Kellogg and Ms.
KIM determines
what promotional surprises to hide in our cereal.

STARES m@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-02-20 published
After the wedding, the chill is gone
James STARES,
KathyMITCHELL wed in a wintry maze of ice
By Louise BROWN,
StaffReporter
The bride wore white -- long johns.
In fact, so did the groom. The best man wore a toque and guests
tucked hot pads in their mitts.
When it's 9 below Celsius at the altar, it takes a few props
to keep love warm.
But romance also kindled the mood yesterday, when snow buffs
Kathy MITCHELL and James
STARES tied the knot in ultimate hoser
style, inside an ice maze near the C.N. Tower.
"It's a true Canadian wedding," laughed the 31-year-old bride,
who has heard every possible cold-related joke since the couple
agreed to marry at the Pontiac Ice Maze, built this week for
the Canadian International Auto Show.
"I've been called the Ice Queen, the Ice Princess, you name it,
but we just did it because a friend of a friend at a publicity
firm was looking for a couple to get married at the maze," said
MITCHELL, a former women's hockey player who snowboards, skis
and skates with her new husband. They're going to Vermont for
a ski honeymoon.
"We talked it over and embraced the idea because we love the
outdoors."
Mind you, the bride worried her bouquet of white hydrangeas and
red roses would freeze before she could throw it. Wind scattered
the rose petals and fake snow being strewn along the path by
the eight flower girls and "snow boys."
And the groom cut the ice cake with a chain saw.
"This gives new meaning to the term 'having cold feet,'" joked
STARES, 35, as he wielded the whining power tool through all
four see-through layers.
"But despite all the glitz, we were still really getting married,
so we wanted it to be meaningful," said
MITCHELL, who had the
Louis Armstrong hit "What a Wonderful World" playing as she emerged
from the maze with her twin sister at her side, to take her place
on the makeshift stage.
"We were actually thinking they were going to have a beach wedding
in the Caribbean, so this was a bit of a surprise," explained
Dorothy MITCHELL, mother of the bride, who clutched a red blanket
over her lap in the front row of the open-air chapel with fold-out
chairs and the Gardiner Expressway in the background.
"But you only live once, so it's fun."
MITCHELL and
STARES both work in product management, and were
introduced 18 months ago by mutual Friends who yesterday served
as maid of honour and best man on the gusty stage.
The couple got engaged last December and had been thinking of
getting married on a sun-baked island until approached about
the frosty alternative.
"But they've both been married before in traditional church weddings,
so I think they wanted to be more casual this time, and just
thought this would be a lot of fun," said Bev
STARES, mother
of the groom.
Still, there are logistical challenges to putting your nuptials
on ice:
A heated tent was provided where the 50 guests could wait until
the 15-minute ceremony began.
Burlap was laid along the bride's route in the maze so her red
high heels wouldn't slip on the ice.
The bride wore a heavy white fur-trimmed cape over her gown,
which was bought in the Spadina fashion district and featured
an unusual red top.
City hall marriage official Aestus
ROGERS had to compete to be
heard with the wind howling across his microphone as he read
the non-denominational vows.
ROGERS too wore many layers beneath
a heavy cape.
Guests were handed gift-wrapped hand-warmers for inside their
mitts as they watched the exchange of vows. The bride kept on
her white gloves as she slipped on her wedding ring, while the
groom donned his on a bare hand.
The newlyweds drove off in a car dragging ice cube trays off
the bumper.
After the sub-zero service, the party proceeded to warmer digs
for the reception at a King St. restaurant.
But flower girl Hannah
BARRICK, the bride's 12-year-old niece,
summed up the family's sentiments about the unusual ceremony.
"I think it was cool -- in both ways."

STEPHENSON m@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-03-05 publishedWALCH /
STEPHENSON
Patricia WALCH and William
STEPHENSON are happy to announce their
marriage, which took place in the presence of dear family and
Friends on the evening of October 23, 2004 at Colborne Street
United Church, London. A reception followed at Michael's Off
Bradley. Pat and Bill wish to thank all those who shared in their special day.

STERLING m@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-01-29 publishedPHELPS /
STERLING
Mike and Patty
PHELPS and John and Wilma
STERLING are pleased to
announce the engagement of their children, Allison
PHELPS and David
STERLING.
A summer 2005 wedding is planned.

SUTHERLAND m@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-03-12 publishedSUTHERLAND,
Roy and Betty - 60th Wedding Anniversary
The family of Roy and Betty
SUTHERLAND wish to invite you to
an Open House to celebrate their parents 60 years together.
Saturday, March 19, 2005 1 p.m.-4 p.m.
Ailsa Craig Recreation Centre
Ailsa Craig, Ontario
Best Wishes Only Please!

SZAUTER m@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-02-26 publishedNEWMAN /
SZAUTER
Karla and Steve, together with their parents, are very happy
to announce that they will be exchanging wedding vows and joining
together in love, on March 5th, 2005. The ceremony to celebrate
their union will take place in London, Ontario, where they work
and reside. Karla is the daughter of John
NEWMAN and Sally
NEWMAN
of Brandon, Manitoba and Steve is the
son of Steve Sr. and Gail
SZAUTER of London, Ontario.